1st Edition
Reimagining Communication: Action
As a part of an extensive exploration, Reimagining Communication: Action investigates the practical implications of communication as a cultural industry, media ecology, and a complex social activity integral to all domains of life.
The Reimagining Communication series develops a new information architecture for the field of communications studies, grounded in its interdisciplinary origins and looking ahead to emerging trends as researchers take into account new media technologies and their impacts on society and culture. The diverse and comprehensive body of contributions in this unique interdisciplinary resource explore communication as a form of action within a mix of social, cultural, political, and economic contexts. They emphasize the continuously expanding horizons of the field by engaging with the latest trends in practical inquiry within communication studies. Reflecting on the truly diverse implications of communicative processes and representations, Reimagining Communication: Action covers key practical developments of concern to the field. It integrates diverse theoretical and practice-based perspectives to emphasize the purpose and significance of communication to human experience at individual and social levels in a uniquely accessible and engaging way.
This is an essential introductory text for advanced undergraduate and graduate students, along with scholars of communication, broadcast media, and interactive technologies, with an interdisciplinary focus and an emphasis on the integration of new technologies.
Table of Contents for Reimagining Communication: Action
Series Introduction (Michael Filimowicz and Veronika Tzankova)
Volume Introduction (Veronika Tzankova and Michael Filimowicz)
Chapter 1
Reimagining Activism as Combative
Billie Murray
Chapter 2
Mobile phones use in an Arab context: Blending modernity and tradition
Mustafa Taha
Chapter 3
Government Policy, Communication and (Affective) Governmentality
Carl Jon Way Ng
Chapter 4
Data Ethics: A Survey of Key Debates and Essential Principles
Joe Cruz and Patrick Lee Plaisance
Chapter 5
Encryption and Hacking: Cyphers, Hacks and Attacks on the Digital Frontier
Jan H. Samoriski
Chapter 6
A Critical Re-Visioning of Networked Power in Photojournalism Praxis
Tara-Lynne Pixley
Chapter 7
White noise, mixed signals, strategic chaos, and the roar of the bewildered herd
Brian Gorman
Chapter 8
Transmedia
Raul Rodríguez-Ferrándiz
Chapter 9
Machine Translation, Language Learning and the ‘Knowledge Economy’: From economic discourses to education in action
Vanessa Enríquez Raído
Marina Sánchez Torrón
Chapter 10
Design
Rune Pettersson
Maria D. Avgerinou
Chapter 11
Media Production in the age of Internet Media: Digitisation, Mediation, Co-Creation
Hart Cohen
Chapter 12
An economic, social and cultural approach to prosumption: music and sound as parodic tools on YouTube meme videos
Candelaria Sánchez Olmos
Eduardo Viñuela
Chapter 13
Collaboration Models in Online Fiction-writing Communities
Alan Tapscott
Joaquim Colàs
Josep Blat
Chapter 14
Culture Industries
Derek Johnson
Chapter 15
Reimagining Digital Humanities: Today’s Trends, Tomorrow’s Promises
Amanda C. R. Clark
Chapter 16
Cochlear Implants and Sign Language in Australia: Why the Deaf Community Must Embrace Non-Signing Implant Recipients
Belinda Barnet, Rachael McDonald, Simone Taffe, Jordy Kaufman
Chapter 17
Familiar Avenues and Paths Less Traveled: Reimagining Organizational Crisis Communication
Timothy Coombs
Chapter 18
Cyber War and Militarization of Communication
Oswelled Ureke
Chapter 19
Invitations to Participation: How Immersive Presentations and Emotional Displays Promote Political Involvement
Erik P. Bucy
Biography
Michael Filimowicz, Ph.D., is a Senior Lecturer in the School of Interactive Arts and Technology at Simon Fraser University. His research is in the area of computer-mediated communication, with a focus on new media poetics applied in the development of new immersive audiovisual displays for simulations, exhibition, games, and telepresence as well as research creation.
Veronika Tzankova is a Ph.D. candidate in the School of Interactive Arts and Technology, Simon Fraser University, and a communications instructor at Columbia College—both in Vancouver, Canada. Her background is in human–computer interaction and communication. Sports shapes the essence of her research, which explores the potential of interactive technologies to enhance bodily awareness in high-risk sports activities.